Abstract

Modernization and secularization theory – the argument that religion is becoming less important as a political and social factor in modern times – have had a far-reaching influence on the study of religion in the social sciences. Exactly how far-reaching this influence has been is a topic of debate that is beyond the scope of this study. It is sufficient to say that a large plurality of the scholars familiar with the topic would likely agree with the following. First, this body of theory, at the very least, was among the most prominent theories on the role of religion in politics and society for much of the twentieth century. Second, some have claimed that it reached the point of a paradigm that was nearly unquestioned in some circles. By this I mean that it is a fact that some have made this claim, not that all would agree with it. Third, by the late twentieth century, among social scientists, the level of acceptance of this body of theory has decreased and the study of religion has increased. While modernization theory and secularization theory are two distinct, but related, bodies of theory, when discussing them as a whole I refer to them as modernization-secularization theory.

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